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The Montgomery Monitor
?at>lJ»brd Eri-ry Thuriiday. Official Organ .Montgomery Connty
Subscription Rates: $ 1 ..50 Per Year in Advance.
H. B. FOLSOM, Owner. N. C. NAPIER, Lessee
Entered at the postbffice n Mt. Vernon, Ga. ( as second
class tnal matter.
Legal advertisements must invariably be paid in advance,
at the legal rate, and as the law directs; and must be In hand
net later than Wednesday morning of first week of insertion.
THURSDAY, JUNE 1, 1922, >
FOR A GREATER AND BETTER SCHOOL.
-—w— l
The City Council of Vidalia and the Vidalia
Board of Education have for some time been study
ing the plan of abolishing the present independent
school system of Vidalia and having the county
board of education lay out a large consolidatec
school district with Vidalia as the center. They
have studied the plan from every angle and have
been favorably impressed with the proposition.
We hope petitions to ascertain the sentiment of the
* voters in Vidalia and in the territory surrounding
Vidalia will be circulated at an early date, so that
if the people approve this plan Representative Lank
ford can he asked to introduce a special bill abol
ishing the Vidalia independent system at the com
ing session of the legislature.
Ts such a plan were carried out it would give
a school district extending about half way to
Normantown, half way to Center, to the county
line on the west, and half way to Lyons on the
east. Every boy and girl in this district would
have access to the district grammar and high school
on equal terms with the children of Vidalia, and
transportation would he provided for those children
living too far from the school to walk. It would
require at once an additional building in the shape
of a modern high school building large enough to
take care of the growth of the school for several
years to come.
I lie plan of abolishing the independent city
systems and going back into the county system is
being adopted by progressive towns and cities all
over the state. We want to sec it adopted in Vi
daha. It would place several hundred boys and
girls living outside the city limits within reach of
a splendid grammar and high school and would he
a grc.it step forward for this section of the county.
Writ i !
V-TJ .. «
y The other day a good man suggested to the
editor tljat it might be a good idea to let Superior
Court Judges preside over courts in districts other
than the one in which they are elected, and we
have to admit that the plan has its good points.
We have always thought that they should be swap
ped about over the state anyway, thus taking them
away from political influence, but the plan as set
toith above might he better. Os course no man
who is elevated to the judgship could be accused of
letting politics interfere with his work, hut all men
are human and all have special friends, and they
can’t help it .—Springfield Herald.
x
OUR BEST GEORGIA PRODUCTS.
Ask a Brooks county man and he will say
‘‘ham." Ask a Houston county man and he will
say "peaches.” South Georgia farmers will show
you a long green melon as the finest Georgia pro
duct. A North Georgia man answers this ques
tion in several ways: “Georgia marble, apples, etc.”
E. E. Mack of Thomasville can tell you something
of fine Georgia raised stock.
Georgia products arc too numerous to mention
in detail, but we want to call attention to our lead
ing state product—our Georgia raised bovs and
girls.
I'liev are today the most valuable asset to this
or any other state, and deserve the very best at the
FOUR AGES IN BUSINESS j
; ; (The Third) |
I I The third age in the business lift of the sue- J
II * cessful business man is from the time he is well 4
J J established in business to the time he retires. Du- 4
; ; ring this time he is building his wealth larger and I
i - larger and he is trying to give his family the com- J
I I forts they desire. . I
II His problem npw is to protect that which he 4
I I has already gained while he earns more. His cred- 4
I I it often plays an important part in his affars be- 4
* « cause it helps him to meet special opportunities as +
< ■ they come# t t
I I The business man at this time finds the serv- 4
II ice of the bank more helpful than ever before. His V?
11 hanekr is alwavs readv to talk with him about his
ii** % • •
< * plans help solve his problems when possible. T
; • This age continues while he is vigorously pushing J
• 1 his affairs. X
II * 4
<» The fourth age will appear next week. T
| The First National Bank {
i: of Vidalia , Georgia f
♦ X
hands of the fathers and mothers, city, county or
state officials.
1 Let us give our best Georgia raised product all
the chance needed to make a future citizenship,
with the great, strong character and educational
ability to cope with the great problems which this
- generation will leave them. Let our slogan be
“More money for education, less jazz and more
• school buildings.”
The best Georgia raised product is one that
must first be developed in the hot house—the
home. If those influences which make good citi
zenship do not touch the early life of Georgia sons
• and daughters, then unhappy is our State, for the
failure of the home means the failure of the State
and Nation.
May* old Georgia he fully alive to her respon
-1 sibility to the best Georgia, raised product—our
splendid boys and girls.—Moultrie Observer.
x
WORKING AN INJUSTICE.
With the government engineers insisting that
the route of the state highway from Vidalia to Ly
one he changed to an entirely new route, running
south of the Seaboard railway, so as to avoid twa
grade crossings which at present exist on the road
between these two' towns, the county commission
ers of Toombs county are trying to arrange to be
gin work on the highway at the county line of
Tattnall county, building the first section, from the
Tattnall line to near Lyons. If this can be done,
they hope later to reach some satisfactory agree
ment with the government authorities as to the
route of the highway between Lyons and Vidalia.
We think the position of the government en
ginee.rs in trying to build state highways so as to
avoid dangerous grade crossings is, in the main,
the correct attitude, yet whej-e this position re
quires the abandonment of a long used road and
the construction of a new road for the distance
such as would he required in Toombs county, it
seems to he putting a very heavy burden on the
county, which has built a splendid road between
these towns, and also would work an injustice on
every landowner who has built a home on this
road on the faith of its being maintained as a coun
ty highway. , ,
’, ; * & , *•*- 4n — r '-•-nr;
CHASING THE CATTLE TICK.
The 112th county in the state has been freed
from the cattle tick —Toombs having completed its
eradication program and being now officially de
clared tick-free. The Vidalia paper reports the
fact with genuine and pardonable enthusiasm under
this trumphant heading: ‘‘Cattle lick Chased
Across The Altamaha.” In Toombs the work
which entailed much, irksome labor and no little
inconvenience for many was carried forward to
thoroughness and completion by the people who
generally and steadily stood by the program to be
rid of the great enemy to the cattle business —a
coining business in all this section of the state. It
is now declared that the entire state may he freed
from the tick by the close of the next year. There
were hopes some time ago that the end of this year
would sec the work done of clearing up the last
Southeast Georgia county. There is work of erad
ication now progressing in fifteen counties to the
south of Toombs and in most of these counties the
people are co-operating with the county and state
and federal officials so that the work may progress
as rapidly "as possible. There has never been such
interest in cattle raising as now in South Georgia—
the raising of cattle for beef purposes and partic
ularly for dairying; creameries established have
given a great impetus to the business of buying and
raising better milk-yielding cattle —pure breds.
The future for the cattle business in South Georgia
presents the most promising outlook for prosperity
i of any sign today.—Savannah News.
THE MONTGOMERY MONITOR
LABOB OIOSS ENDORSE
BUSH FOB RAIL BOARDS
l
, ATLANTA, Ga.—Organized labor
I representatives at a meeting of the
i Chamber of Industry in Savannah, it
: was announced in political circles
: here today, referred the name of Dr.
O. A. Bush, of Pelham to the various
Savannah labor organizations with
• the recommendation that he be en
dorsed for state railroad commissiou
; er to be elected at the general elect
• ion next fall.
Dr. Bush, it is understood, says a
Savannah dispatch, will receive the
undivided backing of labor in tbat sec
tion of state, because of his plan form
plank in reference to having various
rates of public utilites lowered.
Recenty Dr. Bush, while in Savan
nah, assured J. G. Valentine, presi
dent of the state labor organization
that he would make a fight to lower
public utilitv rates if he is elected.
the Pelham physician is quoted by
Mr. Valentino as declaring he believed
there are many rate® increased dur
ing the war that should be reduced
now.
Dr. Bush, who is well and favorab
ly known in Atlanta, is a former mem
ber of the state legislature and a for
mer member of the state demoncratic
committee. He has been a leader in
state politics for a number of years.
He is a cousin of Billie B. Bush, prom
inent Atlanta lawyer.
BIG EATERS®
KIDNEY TRIBIE
Take a glass of Salts before break But
if your Back hurts or Bladder
bothers you.
The American men and women mnst
guard constantly against Kidney trouble,
because we eat too much and all our food
is rich. Our blood is filled with urio
acid which the kidneys strive to filter
out, they weaken from overwork, become
Bluggish; the eliminative tissues clog and
the result is kidney trouble, bladder
weakness and a general decline in health.
When your kidneys feel like lumps of
lead; your back hurts or the urine is
cloudy, full of sediment or you are
obliged to seek relief two or three times
during the night; if you suffer with sick
headache or dizzy, nervous spells, acid
stomach, or you have rheumatism when
the weather is bad, get from your phar
macist about four ounces of Jad Salts;
take a tablespoonful in a glass of
water before breakfast for a few days
and your kidneys will then act fine.
This famous salts is made from the acid
of grapes and lemon juice, combined with
lithia, and has been used for generations
to flush and stimulate clogged kidneys;
to neutralize the acids in the urine so it
no longer is a source of irritation, thus
ending bladder disorders.
Jad Salts is inexpensive; cannot in
jure, makes a delightful effervescent
lithia-water beverage, and belongs in
every home, because nobody can make
a mistake by having a good kidney, flush
ing any time.
—FREE EVERY SATURDAY—
Two Kling Klose hair nets with ev
ery SI.OO purchase of Toilet Articles.
Be sure and get yours. Page’s Drug
Store.
—Ask Tage's Drug Store first.
young men narrowly
ESCAPE IN CAR ACCIDENT
Driving to Yidaiia Saturday night
a car containing Elmore Mart n and
Venable Anderson, of Fitzgerald, and
Hal Macon, of Vidalia, ran off the
bridge over Gum Swamp creek near
Alamo and overturned. Martin suf
fered a sprained arm, his companions
escaping uninjured. The car was
badly damaged.
The banister on the bridge had been
knocked down and just as their car
got on the bridge the driver turned
aside to pass a car coming off the
bridge, and their car went off and
turned completely over.
%
You Do More Work,
You are more ambitious and you get more
enjoyment out of everything when your
blood is in good condition. Impurities in
the blood have a very depressing effect on
the system, causing weakness, laziness,
nervousness and sickness.
GROVE S TASTELESS Chill TONIC
restores Energy and Vitality by Purifying
and Enriching tbe Blood. When you feel
its strengthening, invigorating effect, see
how it brings color to the cheeks and how
it improves the appetite, you will then
appreciate its true tonic value.
GROVE’S TASTELESS Chill TONIC
is not a patent medicine, it is simply
I IRON and QUININE suspended in Syrup.
So pleasant even children like it The
blood needs Quinine to Purify it and IRON
to Enrich it. These reliable tonic prop
erties never fail to drive out impurities in
tbe blood.
The Strength-Creating Power of GROVE’S
! TASTELESS Chill TONIC has made it
the favorite tonic in thousands of homes.
I More than thirty-five years ago, folks
, would ride a long distance to get GROVE’S
J TASTELESS Chill TONIC when a
| member of their family had Malaria or
• needed a body-building, strength-giving
tonic. eThe formula is just the same to
day, and you can get it from any drug ,
store. 60c per bottle.
66 m j j
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A sweeping verdict for QUALITY
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i
Anything For Money
\
We have heard of people who were so unprin
cipled that they* would do anything for money. It
is not exactly true. Most of them might do any
thing for money —except work for it. They would
not do that!
The man who is willing to work for his money
is usually a reliable citizen, and if in addition he
saves his money he becomes doubly valuable, both
to himself and to the community in which he lives.
Money saved and placed in the bank puts the de
positor on the road to prosperity.
THE CITIZENS BANK
OF VIDALIA
Vidalia, Georgia
Enough to Weather
Any Storm
IT is in time of business readjustment that the
real value of a bank foundation is shown.
Our Resources have been conserved in prosperous
days for just such a readjustment period as this
and with the added advantage of our Membership
in the Federal Reserve System we are better
•quipped to serve you now than ever.
THE BANK OF SOPERTON
CAPITAL $25,000.00 SURPLUS $25,000.00
N. L. GILLIS, President. J. E. HALL, V.-Pres & Cash.
J. B. O’CONNOR, V.-Pres. I. H. HALL, JR., Ass’t Cash.
SOPERTON, GEORGIA
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l FOR CHOICE MEATS AT ALL TIMES :
► See Palmer, the Meat Man 5
► 4
► All orders delivered Promptly. Prices <
► Right and Quality the Best. Patronage «
► of the public respectfully asked. 1
► <
► J. A. Palmer Mt. Vernon, Ga. J.
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